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Follow the Freakonomics Radio podcast for weekly episodes that explore the hidden side of everything — with host Stephen J. Dubner.

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Using an old drug in a brand new way can save patients’ lives. So why aren’t companies doing it? Because as it turns out, “repurposing” an existing drug has 0 financial upside. In this episode, guest host Steve Levitt explores what happens when markets fail patients, along with physician-scientist David Fajgenbaum (whose life was saved by a decades-old drug used in a new way) and economist Chris Snyder. How do you fix a market that doesn’t pay for cures? This new episode of Freakonomics Radio is available now, wherever you get your podcasts.

Using an old drug in a brand new way can save patients’ lives. So why aren’t companies doing it? Because as it turns out, “repurposing” an existing drug has 0 financial upside. In this episode, guest host Steve Levitt explores what happens when markets fail patients, along with physician-scientist David Fajgenbaum (whose life was saved by a decades-old drug used in a new way) and economist Chris Snyder. How do you fix a market that doesn’t pay for cures? This new episode of Freakonomics Radio is available now, wherever you get your podcasts.

16,149 görüntüleme

Werner Herzog once made a film that required hauling a real 320-ton steamship up a steep hill in the Amazon. So it’s perhaps unsurprising that he feels filmmaking with A.I., rather than going that extra distance for art, has “no spark of life.” In this conversation with Stephen Dubner, Herzog explains why he isn’t worried about artificial intelligence replacing artists. What concerns him is something else entirely: our obsession with facts over truth, convenience over striving, mimicry over meaning. Listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts.

Werner Herzog once made a film that required hauling a real 320-ton steamship up a steep hill in the Amazon. So it’s perhaps unsurprising that he feels filmmaking with A.I., rather than going that extra distance for art, has “no spark of life.” In this conversation with Stephen Dubner, Herzog explains why he isn’t worried about artificial intelligence replacing artists. What concerns him is something else entirely: our obsession with facts over truth, convenience over striving, mimicry over meaning. Listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts.

15,175 görüntüleme

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